Gaza and Aestheticide

Seminar with T. J. Demos

Basel Abbas y Ruanne Abou-Rahme, At Those Terrifying Frontiers Where the Existence and Disappearance of People Fade Into Each Other [En esas fronteras aterradoras donde la existencia y la desaparición de personas se disuelven entre sí], 2019

Basel Abbas y Ruanne Abou-Rahme, At Those Terrifying Frontiers Where the Existence and Disappearance of People Fade Into Each Other, 2019

Museo Reina Sofía

This seminar examines the systematic destruction of Palestinian collective sensibility — what we might call “aestheticide” — that has accompanied Israel’s genocide and ecocide in Gaza, and considers the conditions of artistic practice in its aftermath. Over more than two years, the demolition of universities, archives, museums, and libraries has not only erased cultural and intellectual infrastructure but has also targeted the very possibility of representation itself. The destruction of a people has been accompanied by the destruction of their image, their history, and their capacity to be known: reportage, scholarship, and cultural memory have been deliberately undermined, with media institutions, universities, and museums often complicit in this repression. Gaza consequently functions as a rehearsal space for a possible global future — of fascism, post-liberal authoritarianism, militarized borders, and AI-enabled warfare —, a laboratory for an emerging world order. What, then, becomes of critical analysis and resistance under these conditions? And what becomes of aesthetics and politics?

This three-hour seminar engages in dialogue with a broader line of work on the climate emergency and decolonial perspectives developed within the Museum of the Commons project (2023–2026) of the L’Internationale network, of which the Museo Reina Sofía is a member; as well as with some of the questions that animate the study group Aesthetics of Peace and Desertion Tactics. Finally, it is also embedded in a wider strategy of support for and commitment to the artistic and discursive practices of Palestinian artists and cultural practitioners, most clearly reflected in the TEJA network.

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Participants

T. J. Demos

T. J. Demos is Professor and Chair in the Department of the History of Art and Visual Culture, at University of California, Santa Cruz (UC Santa Cruz), founding Director of its Center for Creative Ecologies; and Distinguished Visiting Professor in the VIAD Research Centre at the University of Johannesburg (UJ). His research, situated at the intersection of contemporary art, politics, and ecology, has resulted in numerous publications, including Radical Futurisms: Ecologies of Collapse, Chronopolitics, and Justice-to-Come (Sternberg Press, 2023), Against the Anthropocene: Visual Culture and Environment Today (EPR Murcia Cultural, 2022), and Decolonizing Nature: Contemporary Art and the Politics of Ecology (Akal, 2020). Between 2019 and 2021, he directed the Mellon Foundation–supported research seminar Beyond the End of the World, a collective reflection project organized around the questions “what comes after the end of the world?” and “how can we cultivate futures of social justice from within capitalist ruins?”

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